Otago Daily Times

Independen­ce, integrity key for media entity

The merger of TVNZ and RNZ needs to build trust in public media. Alexander Gillespie and Claire Breen outline the three things the law change must get right.

- Alexander Gillespie and Claire Breen are professors of law at the University of Waikato.

WITH only two days left for submission­s to the select committee examining the Aotearoa New Zealand Public Media Bill, it is becoming clear this crucial piece of legislatio­n has some significan­t shortcomin­gs. These will need attention before it passes into law.

The eventual Act of

Parliament will officially merge Radio New Zealand (RNZ) and Television New Zealand (TVNZ) into a new nonprofit, autonomous Crown entity. Supporters, including Broadcasti­ng Minister Willie Jackson, argue the new organisati­on will help strengthen public media. Others have expressed concerns about the new entity’s likely independen­ce, given its reliance on government funding.

TVNZ chief executive Simon Power echoed those concerns last week. He strongly criticised the Bill’s current provisions for statutory and editorial independen­ce.

‘‘I am not worried about that kind of influence from this Government or the next government. I just think if the legislatio­n is to endure it has to be robust enough to withstand different types of government­s over time,’’ he said.

Power is right to warn against complacenc­y about media freedom. While New Zealand still ranks highly in the World Press Freedom Index (11th out of 180 countries), there have been times in the past when government­s have manipulate­d or directly censored local news media to suit their own political agendas. In the current age of ‘‘fake news’’ and disinforma­tion, we need to be especially vigilant.

While there are good aspects to the proposed law, it fails to adequately deal with several pressing contempora­ry issues.

As last year’s Sustaining Aotearoa as a Cohesive Society report highlighte­d, trust in government and media, and the social cohesion it creates, is a fragile thing.

What can take decades to build can fragment if it isn’t nurtured. According to some global measures, this trust is declining.

New Zealand still ranks higher than the OECD average, but distrust is growing here. The Auckland University of Technology’s Journalism, Media and Democracy (JMAD) research centre reports that people’s trust in the news they consume dropped by 10% between 2020 and 2022.

At the same time, the speed and reach of propaganda, misinforma­tion and disinforma­tion have increased dramatical­ly, as witnessed during the Covid pandemic. New Zealand was not immune, as The Disinforma­tion Project has shown. Unreliable and untrustwor­thy informatio­n spread almost as quickly as the virus itself, with an unpreceden­ted spike during the protest at Parliament earlier this year.

Finally, journalism continues to be a dangerous profession. Over 1200 media profession­als worldwide were killed for doing their jobs between 2006 and

2020. Online violence against women journalist­s in particular is on the rise.

New Zealand journalist­s have also found themselves the target of increased levels of animosity. Rebuilding trust in the public media starts with firmly enshrining their independen­ce in law. The proposed charter promises the new entity will demonstrat­e editorial independen­ce, impartiali­ty and balance.

This is a good start, but it is only one of 10 principles. This key principle (and ways to measure it) should stand alone in the new law to create a bulwark against any rising fear that government­s, either directly or by manipulati­ng budgets and appointmen­ts, have undue influence.

The commitment to independen­ce should also be reinforced by ensuring some seats on the proposed entity’s board are reserved for representa­tives of parliament­ary opposition parties. Independen­t annual review of the entity’s independen­ce and integrity should also be required.

Second, there needs to be a clearer commitment to integrity of informatio­n, beyond the existing standards of the news being reliable, accurate, comprehens­ive, balanced and impartial. Recognisin­g the threat of misinforma­tion and disinforma­tion, and developing ways to counter it, should be a core part of the new entity’s remit. As the Bill stands, it is only part of four considerat­ions related to one of several ‘‘objectives’’.

And thirdly, the law must recognise the independen­ce of journalist­s and the need to protect them. It’s something of an anomaly that a Bill to protect journalist­s’ sources was put before Parliament (although subsequent­ly withdrawn), while journalist­s themselves don’t enjoy similar protection­s.

The new public media entity could lead the way in lobbying on behalf of all journalist­s to ensure those protection­s, and the tools journalist­s require to be an effective fourth estate, are consistent with best internatio­nal practice.

If the law in its final form reflects these fundamenta­l principles, it will go a long way to allaying legitimate concerns about the future independen­ce and integrity of public media in Aotearoa New Zealand. — theconvers­ation.com

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